Citations:Lüeyang

English citations of Lüeyang

 
Map including Lüeyang (DMA, 1988)
  • [1978 June 8 [1978 May 9], “SHENSI CITES MILITIA COMPANY”, in Daily Report: People's Republic of China[1], volume I, number 111, Foreign Broadcast Information Service, →ISSN, →OCLC, page M5:
    The CCP Committee of the Shensi Provincial Military District recently decided to confer the title of model militia company on the militia company of a production brigade in (Paishuichiang) Commune in Luehyang County for its achievements in safeguarding railway operations. A citation ceremony which was held on 5 May in Luehyang County was attended by 1,000 people including responsible comrades of the provincial CCP and revolutionary committees, the provincial military district, the Hanchung Prefectural CCP and revolutionary committees, the Sian municipal CCP and revolutionary committees, the Luehyang County CCP and revolutionary committees and other units concerned.]
  • [1980, James Chan, edited by C. K. Leung and Norton Ginsburg, China: Urbanization and National Development[2], →ISBN, →LCCN, →OCLC, pages 16, 282:
    During the period of the Fourth Five-Year Plan, 1971-75, the Chuchou-Kueiting line, which forms part of the east-west trunk line from Hangchou to K'unming, was completed, while other possible construction included the central segment of a line linking Peking with Yuanping, Shanhsi province, and lines linking Wuhan through Ank'ang, Shenhsi province, with Chungking, Ssuch'uan province, and with Luehyang on the Paochi-Chengtu line. []
    Luehyang 略陽
    ]
  • 2010, Ancient and Early Medieval Chinese Literature[3], volume I, →ISBN, →ISSN, →LCCN, →OCLC, page 238:
    Fu Lang's ancestral home was Linwei (臨渭) in Lüeyang (略陽) commandery (northeast of modern Tianshui (天水), Gansu).
  • 2011, “The Major Cities of Southern and Western China”, in The Geography of China: Sacred and Historic Places[4], 1st edition, →ISBN, →LCCN, →OCLC, page 242:
    Above these points, junks can navigate beyond Chengdu to Guanxian and Maoxian on the Min River and to Lüeyang in southern Shaanxi on the Jialing.
  • 2019, Franciscus Verellen, Imperiled Destinies: The Daoist Quest for Deliverance in Medieval China[5], →ISBN, →LCCN, →OCLC, →OL, page 318:
    Xingzhou was more than five hundred kilometers northeast of Chengdu, in modern Lüeyang 略陽 county, across today's border with Shaanxi.
  • 2021 January 27, Li You, “Northwest China Reports Thallium Pollution in Yangtze Tributary”, in Bibek Bhandari, editor, Sixth Tone[6], archived from the original on 27 January 2021[7]:
    Environmental authorities in Lüeyang County, Shaanxi province, discovered excessive levels of thallium in two of the Jialing River’s upstream tributaries on Jan. 20, according to a statement Monday. The concentration of thallium that day was 170% higher than the standard for Qingni River, one of the upstream tributaries bordering Gansu province.